HST Morphologies of z ~ 2 Dust-Obscured Galaxies II: Bump Sources
R. S. Bussmann, Arjun Dey, J. Lotz, L. Armus, M. J. I. Brown, V., Desai, P. Eisenhardt, J. Higdon, S. Higdon, B. T. Jannuzi, E. Le Floc'h, J., Melbourne, B. T. Soifer, D. Weedman

TL;DR
This study uses HST imaging to analyze the morphologies of z~2 dust-obscured galaxies, revealing differences linked to their star-formation activity and merger stages, and comparing them with other ULIRG populations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed morphological comparison of bump DOGs with other ULIRGs, highlighting differences related to merger stages and obscuration levels.
Findings
Bump DOGs are larger and more irregular than power-law DOGs.
Less obscured ULIRGs tend to have more regular, single-object morphologies.
Morphological trends align with merger simulations and evolutionary stages.
Abstract
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging of 22 ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) at z~2 with extremely red R-[24] colors (called dust-obscured galaxies, or DOGs) which have a local maximum in their spectral energy distribution (SED) at rest-frame 1.6um associated with stellar emission. These sources, which we call "bump DOGs", have star-formation rates of 400-4000 Msun/yr and have redshifts derived from mid-IR spectra which show strong polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon emission --- a sign of vigorous on-going star-formation. Using a uniform morphological analysis, we look for quantifiable differences between bump DOGs, power-law DOGs (Spitzer-selected ULIRGs with mid-IR SEDs dominated by a power-law and spectral features that are more typical of obscured active galactic nuclei than starbursts), sub-millimeter selected galaxies (SMGs), and other less-reddened ULIRGs from the…
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